a a aa aaa a oer imam mmanan mela nC MaMa Ny a i st gg Saat y . = er aa & 7 ig ate iki agg a i po pdt ie SE Gee er bs oan . . Commenting on this statement, ; | ° t hve GHirFer vas | tne toronto siar adds that the Ontaric ) Aneurysm The Youth Of China | Housing Corporation doesn't dare re- * Ottawa Journal See ee Nees poise ~—-|_veal where it has bought apartments ‘| Treatment | Once more the have | tom of the future and Wallace Werd Frenk Welker | for public housing because such an- ; consolidated a or — | Managing Editor Editor : Dr, Theedere R. Van Delles | young people. Published every week day moming (except Sun | Nouncements invariably produce ‘ The aorta, largest artery of | August it may Ab aa roots aia day and sentey bakin) at 165 Prince arent howls of rage from neighboring prop- » extends = from | that order and purpose could Charlottetown, P.E.!., Thomson Newspapers e “ , ’ ventricle | heart Brench offices at Summerside, Montague, Alberton erty owners. Have we really bred serves as the main trunk of eee eee 2 De Seat stun. oo a . te be that and Souris. . | such smug, middle-class morality vessels that carry | But order and purpose there is |ern democracies are Regrenpated nationally wy Teamuan Nenenone | here,” it asks, “that families with the tissues of | now, perhaps even welcomed | of their youth and the | Advertising ices: Toro 3 the body. It is more than an inch| by the vast majority of young and Eastern Communist | Empire 38894; Montreal 640 Cathcart Street Uni | low incomes must be sneaked into and travels through | who know that there is in fact | tries are building on their j wereity GEAR: Wessarn Office 1090 Wow Georg | suburban apartments as if they gul- the chest and ab-| more in life to learn than the | If Communist y-ath tamber Canedian Dally Newnpepar Publishes | fered from some loathsome disfigure- ea eee - = 4 Tunes or the art of loaf _— & new world we camel ba i ien - Mw ” . concerned about " Prose lo eachanvely entitled to-the vse for repue- | ment? right and left legs. Even so, can we fail to note for thelr youth hos fal onl tae Ration, of all awe eppaches - he paoer In Toronto, as in other large tities; : eres ” the contrast between our own | strength of an idea but has the i it it ress or Re: . Sei ee tc. the lace! ren published herein. a | downtown land has become too expen- ee aS ee ee Sate} ae. ie right or republication of special dispatches here | sive for this kind of housing invest- robbing differ- | collection left with the Women's further: if — e. Wn ‘alee ‘reserved. Subscription ote: \| ment. The heart of the city is avail- their quota of | Canadian Club by Mr. Charles bullding and and belie Not over 40c per week by carrier. to the surgical /Lynch of his recent visit to | ving the fault must be $12.00 @ year by mail on rural routes and areas able only for luxury apartments or neurysm of the | China: that the teenagers were } the — rot re 00 « year off island and U.K. $20.00 per | Other high-income development. Pub- boned aren thnk oon % ~ s re aes ee. ane aes. year in U.S. and elsewhere outside British Com. lic housing, despite the drawbacks. wee! to balloon out were thoroughly proud of the | them the world that disiilusions moran: : of transportation and integration, inner tube. The | 2°”, China. Youth in China, be | them. @ youth lacks faith ba over 7c single copy- ; : “ r said, believe that the Chinese | spirit it if becomes ‘ Member Audit ‘Bureau of Circulation. must move into the suburbs. There J 4 : pulsates a may | brand of communism is the sys- | feel free of the blame. “The strongest memory is weaker | is no other alternative. And somehow . pain a —_ es fian the weakest ink” —perhaps through a program of pub- | veins, bones, ’ . PAGE 4 TUESDAY, OCTOBER & 1963. | lic education—suburban communities ; Ds eongyp towns Fi hting The Sea-Lamp rey : must be led to accept class integra- wie Go teae ; _Shlp-Shore News A Fair Proposal | tion. Politicians must screw up their | - ; scope and can be felt when the | A constant state of war exists | lamprey and thus bring back : d d ist : is located in the ab- | between lake scientists on the | the fish population. bse Premier Lesage has given a tart | courage and resist pressure” against dominal part of the. aorta. ove hand and the deadly sea | Alternating current has been answer to “what does Quebec want?” public housing next door to where : aneurysm also | lamprey.on the other. The com | used to- paralyse lampreys on queries which he says are fairly wide: | their voters lve. sca sal | ot hae ema maces ace in| tne way wot Some spread in western Carfada. “Any sug- Mr. Bradley. notes the Toronto a a wove se os 3 nets wh aie) coperates eh from lamprey. ‘ gestion that we humbly submit a list,; paper, put the blame for Toronto’s ae ' outer | fishing ai age The US. pad Boa of requests for atterition and disposal/ | wretched conditions where it belongs es See eyere,: ee we Folla. a a some tt by the rest of Canada,” he told —‘“not on welfare officials, not even oo a oe oes 2. ; a as on vane pened, hoe wong have ere vi ears 5 tes a ; pa’ began ‘ streams Winnipeg audience last week, is out | on the slum landlords or on the land process causes shock and ex-| suffered badly— their mumber | lakes, By 1961 there were signe @ of the question. The very idea of pas- | speculators, although they may be cruciating distress in’ the chest | dropped from an annual catch | that man’s wer on the lamorey sively submitting our views for cor | partly responsible. It is we who liv on te. In addition, the arter- | of 15 so half- a million in | eel was Te progress. sideration or rejection is for us hard | the good life in this city who reall Tis Vest sans Woheg, | eelhegt toe Sos tok a body os'| wor Gave manne © aloe’ Gn to accept—we are seeking to ex- | are the guiltv ones.” x resembling pe ge a species. cult for _ meen to get up change views, not receive judge- It also quotes the housing author- ee Neeenlee eeeraeeee | bepee —_e | Tales." taoldent-, be om aneurysms are serious be-| ments joined forces . to | ally, the lamprey is lazy. He ment. ity director as pointing out that there “WHY CAN'T HE GROW OLD GRACEFULLY?’ . | cause there is a possibility that | fight the lamprey. In 1956 the | hitchhikes. He doesn't swim too This being the case, would not-/-js no stigma attached to the poor in oe ee ee ee lanes ce sage much and poe on to the side, tars . ie 8 on was established 5 bottom of ships coming : such mp eT — pai pro- | England. Anyone can apply for public INDIA'S MANY FACES —— to cortect the condition by re-|ernments of Canada and the | stream. It hes been keowe fect mot y the kind of national con- housing there regardless of his in- | ’ ; . * placing or by- passing the | United States. -| Jampreys te go downstreand, ference which Mr. Diefenbaker has | come and London is completing a 10,- : : Wel e Of R An Ton ves aneuryem with 8 Decron or Tel-| = The chemist, the electrical | sais have gone from just be.” ns ’ lon graft. The outcome of sur- | engineer and the hydraulics ex- suggested—a conference which would | 900-unit building program. Since the Bewildering Velt oe Neawes ‘ d g gery depends upon the location | pert have also joined fences ta low the Soo right down to Leamm, bring together representatives from | war, one out of every four houses in eh of the lesion, These difficult pro- | an all-out attempt to kill the | ington on Lake Erie. ; ll in Canada “in a spirit of hate One seventh of the human | 1951 industrial production has | distinctive religion, known in | cedures require a team of high- - . aa eo : eo Britain has been built by the govern- | ...¢ — some 471,627,000 people | more than doubled. Steel capac- | the West as Hinduism. This re- | ly skilled surgeons. ia ; ‘ ‘ co-operation” to examine the constitu- | ment. ~~ of bewildering variety— lives in jity has quintupled; electrical | ligion has no clergy and no dog-| ° INACTIVITY? > To Réscue Of Wind mills tion in the light of a century's ex- e war-troubled India. generation capacity has quad: |ma; it has thousands of gods,| Mrs. V. writes: I'm 2% and perience? Quebec wouldn’t be going ~ A Bitter Pill The, wedeesisely: Hinde. ae: /Pueted put a Hindu need wot believe | happily, marcied but | simply | West Germany Bulletin is there “in the position of a vassal ask- alin Tavinr: rl million a | HEALTH IMPROVED .| SIN. ALWAYS PUNISHED licious meal does not tempt me. | It was almost too late—when ; sum when compared to what Is - fatont a” ‘ te th fears Prof. Charles Taylor, NDP candi- | rate ea core the popula. | Malaria has been nearly era- there are no binding | What do you think is wrong? |i Germany people began to | done for windmills in the cour a , ‘ month. In two years the popul Though i ? cour: ' g for favours.” to quote the Que date for Montreal Mount Royal, is | ji5,' win total hal a billion. By | dicated. The life span of the av- | rituals or beliefs, Hinduism has REPLY a oe» panes wane oe most famous — ; z premier’s words at Winnipeg, set finding that politics is indeed a queer | 1971, some experts estimate, | Tse Indian ~ eee certain characteristic concepts. PE nas’ —— the basis of equality with the other game. What astoriishes him is that | there will be $50 million Indians: | out 70 in ishecn countries) wanes, holds that virtuous acts | you in depressed stage? Do you | % become extinct. In Schieewig- |970 windmills still in existence provinces. a his old friend and colleague Prof. | j..ome eo cage 6 phat Nineteen new pe gre are always rewarded; evil acts | bave children, hobbies, ; A strong supporter of Mr. Diefen- | Pierre-Elliott Trudeau, who teaches | India has many faces. It is |ave been built, bringing ¢ he /will be punished. Consequently, | interests, not. the sumtte te tour | middle of the 19th century there have : 4 baker’s proposal is Premier Robarts | jaw with him at the University of | atomic physicists at Bombay ch, wake t ie ia this dice. | were’ 800 gwakening to the problem f Ontario, who said that such a fed- ‘ and Naga tribesmen in Assam. : present life they will be paid for | Problem may Particularly in this and | the v windmill. In West- of On who Montreal and is a co-contributor to a | jt is ruby-decked maharajas | 90,000. in another, as the soul migrat: | tion. 3 i is Soe Meena cen Loe eee cea tes: eral-provincial conference would be | French-language political magazine, | and ragged street sweepers, Ox- te the first responsibility facing all those | should be bidding for nomination as | forttrained philosophers and | ved. Ap advertisement for a re | Karma provides a rationale for.) 10° Jy ti ee: Mi ae with who will be elected on November 8, | Literal Party et ha a sate '| Cattaneo Se cao ty teens pecs eee ee Re C0 |e eck? ens are now uniting in the ef- | | Watermills are especially typ- and that it must be held in open ses- | riding for the federal election. ing Jain monks, Hindus, Mos: | With doctor's degrees and 16 oth | past good deeds; There marks of another day and age. |da, nedr Nuremberg, boasts | sion where “everybody.can be in on | - “it is ironic to think that two | JeMs,, Zoroastrians, Christians, | 70 220" Perec t0 onal in: |gine, ine Punta’ for awe sons “leaplte the propaganda | _ Previously it was only the | Germany's largest mill wheel, i, short years ago Pierre Trudeau sup- | speaks 800 TONGUES cote averages ‘Sele fevet, ‘ON'| Maye is the doctzine that the | Sones Soe Sal. Sercene “Gd anything shoat teruiag tae | tom teciaty, tie ena Ware Up to now. Mr. Robarts maintain- | ported my candidacy strongly against |‘ Though most of India’s heav- | oi exiot cn the eoulvaleat of Physical world | does not zit! | ion occurs when food allergy | 04; no longer needed windmills, | most 40 feet in diameter. ; ed, there has been no forum for Que- | the same Liberal Party in the name of | gest of Pathan, in Soa? tunis |four cents each a day. Each er. Belief in life's illusory —na- |! @ faetor. In such instances, eee pened gar Fh th gy ot cage 2g bec and the other provinces to sit, | which he now wislies to oppose it,” | stili has about 50 million Mos- | jon: ‘housands of people bed lire Baggy 22 Poni ee ne Tritamt should P@ thus keeping them from being |left where they were and” are - lay out their problems, negotiate the.| Mr. Taylor says. ‘I welcome the ee It ae aa they have no other place to go. |but some critics argue that it __ FOODS IN ACNE — — sen Adbony, ; A: andi woes hit dak fae Cie _ fundamental principles of unity, and | chance to challenge him to explain | ster Indonesia and Pakista The new Indian nation has | increases passive acceptance of | J. M. writes: Can a teenager | 1104 on the initiative of citiz- | Many millers even though they," \— “renegotiate the basis of our Confed- | what has changed in this Liberal | “India wears fedora and fez, |Tis°®, Mid the monuments of 8 /things as they are and thus inr | one Sine to Kommoreers*/POr | ens hag, succeeded in collecting |have long since installed engin” : ion in the light of present day | “since as | ir "| turban and Gandhi cap, the lat- 1 L oreadtnadtt ccsmnis Ale ; REPLY almost a million marks since its | es, still use the wind when i « . os ; % » |. London hat Small ounts 0 realities.” There should be the oppor- | give up the fight and change sides.” | piest loin cloth. It speaks more valince exited tl 62 least 5, sae mae made i tashistogh Mere erated, but in general, rich and |®Y bas been spent for renova-| The craft of windmilling cor tunity for,Quebec “to negotiate as an Mr. Taylor concludes sadly that | than 800 languages and dialects, | 099 years ago.” and more sari-ciad women are | Stessy foods ought to be omit- | Hoes of the 200 windmills ~~ ate oe = ees : equal partner and give us a chance | it-shows “clearly ‘. _ to —_— a Ste te cena as oe sot the centuries, waves of | leaving home to wer in the | *@4 from et are | calls its own. cee $s Lower Senay for regent negotiate as well.” : the.old corrupt forces have contro -. : i waders— Ar,ans, Greeks, | growing industries. dams ae Not that this-is great training apprentices. tr id that after such ; ‘i Wy a handful of people, wediane, | Turks, Mongols, Persians, and |are rising to provide water for |G: L. writes: Would a mem 7 — = Mr. Robarts said that after such | over the Quebec Federal Liberal ha peop! a has | js fcha is the farms and power for factories. | *#lly deficient pereon know how e a consensus was reached between the | Party that the Liberal leadership are- | Coscia, Mongolold, Nesceld, ana subcontinent. Each wave lett te | Some dams are being built in | # Vote? REPLY To \ ‘Pool Trains’ parties there would have to be | forced to resort to this in order to | Australoid. | mark and was absorbed. the ancient manner of the No. Be more concerned ance rains Pe changes worked out for the British | introduce Trudeau into Parliament. | People are India's pride, “but jf cues de nt poet ie ponte naead af acken| me of border- Lenten Free Press North America Act. But first of all | 1t was apparently impossible to find | ‘increases undermine ths setae mt| years ago. They gave the land a | ery. _ «OWORN-OUT HIPS wee ar i oye Hi th have become accustomed there must be a full understanding, | » nomination for him in any of the 70- | ious economy. Food riots broke _M. L. writen; Ta degeneration | cific Baliwayervave come te a | the long runs hoveves, the ead not only with regard to Quebec’s de- | odd French-speaking ridings of this ey Fodor aes t p +M of the hips a form of arthritis? | parting of the ways on the joint | of the pooling system should sires and ambitions, but with regard i h be. para- ee o rreven assacres ae operation of major intercity | make for the more économie ' ) g province, so that he has to Pp as well-ay their number, causes Yes — osteoarthritis. passenger services in Ontario to the desires and ambitions of all | chuted into Mount Royal, a riding eae cake a _ occurred Milwaukee Journal TODAY'S: HEALTH HINT — and Quebec, The vallworn pales Operation of passenger services i : ve sal ‘ ; e questions. South- i : E : , the partners in Confederation. with which he had no connection | orn indians have bitterly resist. |thre er ee pens danger |ftrong npasures are, oe - eeu see ee aa Already there has been a behind- | whatever, and which has always been | ed northern attempts to replace |tween India and Pakistan. U ments, at least temporarily, this (NOTE: All correspondence doors “attéinpt to effect a constitu- represented by an English-speaking. English with Hindi as India’s | Thant, secretary general of the | may be the wisest and simplest | te Dr. Vas Dellen should be —~ er 5 . : . industrial economy onto a so- \ suspicious of it, and rightly so, since | breaks with their past. Parting ma ee ; solution. Even if the cease fire iP: gntly p g Y | ciety in which 70 percent of the should hold, this will not be! During a-recent interview, Mr.| York-Humber to make en tm- irst- ‘ ” it had no first-hand knowledge of | be “such sweet sorrow” for lovers, as | people still till the soil. Since easy. India says it will “never” |Raiph Cowan, the Liberal can- | partial, well-considered choice ‘ ee : eg official language. As It of i y addressed to: Dr. Theodore t, tional revision, which is said to have | Canadian.” agitation, Bombay had to be di- conse ite ta “not nelbig” he 1h to the Sekine can Pokibnan | Vou Damen, og°Cideigle Tie ‘ __ béen agreed to by all the provincial That’s the way it goes! Mr. Tru- | vided into two states, one speak- | charges both sides with failing | is. une, Chicago, Illinois.) _ | Fepresentatives at the conference but | deau was one of three Quebec “in-*| Jn€ Guiareti and the other Mar- oe hee 7 1 which the Quebec legislature has not | tellectuals” who joined the Liberal Amid its many obstacies, ates ace rere ~/ i sanctioned. The Opposition | was | camp last month, making painful India is earnestly trying to graft coun to oes oa ceful Mr e Cowan S Outlook ; Toronte Globe and Mail T what went on. It the conference pro- | the poet says, but in politics there’s : give up Kashmir. Pakistan says | gidate for York-Humber, talked | when they cast their ballots No posed bv the Conservatives is to have | nothing sweet about it. Our Yesterdays canes ie ae ie omen ee eee po ngy oe gt bi tagr ee ee suce Pre ° sants developing a duc : - Siler Roberts insists, be-beld nth EDITORIAL NOTES (From The Gaardien Fria) |,,T2, AI completely conct | marsh. He added, however, that Cowan clearly aligned ‘with the mier Robarts . a ‘ ing positions which, if held to, /he had never mentioned~ his | good guys, is there any point in open. This is a matter of prime con- The British Information Service | TWENTY - FIVE YEARS AGO | would make settlement impos- | hunting interests publicly “be- |examining the issues? cern to every Canadian, and there | q % confine itself to rting so- (October 5, 1940) sible. Pakistan says’ it will quit | cause a lot of people have funny| Mr. Cowan's outlook has all t » al oesn repo! gs Hitler and Mussolini spent | the UN if it doesn’t get its way. | ideas about the killing of anim- | the classic simplicity of a tele- should be no secrecy about it. called big events. Here’s a little one | three hours together in an arm- | India warns the “great pow- | gis.” : vision Western — the unchuttered we found entertaining: “A new raven | °Ted car in the Brenner Pass, |€rs” not to try to influence its | No such delicacy intervenes, |Cofrontation of good and evil. 4 . RD: 4 decisions. ; somehow ’ - Toronto s Big Problem has arrived at the Tower of London nk hath Senaauiums Already arms aid has been resem | oan Seeat i Reed ate role of the. evils, pretene ; An example of what happens when / to replace one'which died during the | claimed their decisions would | stopped — to India and Pakis of Killing human beings by sus. |'28 his prisoner trom the lynch housing conditions get out of hand is | summer. The dead bird’s name was Sor ture Gos ppc eda indies “hee ee pee da pending them from a rope in | 0». being furnished by the wealthy city | ‘Garvie’ and-the replacement has | the “new Europe.” (depend upon the United States.|there are’ tinnes wees’ this modi | THAM,LEADER ARRIVES | of Toronto. The evidence—some of it | been provided by Sir Ronald Garvey, Wiis nal Pen gga = oo vigoreus proponent of capital |The leader of a 50-man Royal presented at a judicial inquiry into | Lieutenant Governor of the Isle of | cruising protectively wer Rew (least hinted st last. weet Scairied Wirt? tar hs sneer Ae Daten etn whic before Judge Rogert Forsyth— | Man. As a compliment to the donor | mania’s oil fields and the Italian | would be'a serious matter for he about ~ or “wneeig a ear eee a = oe given further prominence last | the new bird is being called ‘Garvey’.” | army, jockeying along Albania’s | Dood countries. waves of his own emotionalism. | day, Group Cap, G. tf, Currie week by the director of the city’s |- __—_*__#___ «| Fate tone far En kale | Soe ee ie ee Embarked cx just much a fer. wil, begin iacuedions with Tes “MORTGAGES— =——=S«T authority. Robert Bradley, Tokyo businesses are encouraging | offensive, probably diplomatic. |would suffer. But so would they | ven im Toronte on Sonday sake, | fou, Of the teaining program, ho ae, on the | a new lunch hour recreation fad for TEN YEARS AGO aortas ne ~ brutally, | Mr. Cowan declared: “My stand | which calls for up to 400 Tan- ; - fact that last year, with 4,000 families | workers—fishing from artifical ponds (October 5, 1955) sult, as it siniiet inevitetay : a ee eee a Sanat x en ee mae ti ' 9,000 children needing pub- | built in some office buildings, says | The beautiful new Stella | would, in religious massacres. |1¢ Ton meted Taf Cnne |p —— = || - Cuntlottetows a ee housing, the city built only 54 | the CanadaJapan Trade Council. |, a ae quake Pdf cy =. yall es 9 tog | ting I can to fight in favor of : es : er For every seven houses torn | Tokyo now has some 370 artificial | was opened by Mr. Neil A.|to prevent a war that could ne Oe ee ey DANCING We commercial 8 s can provide mortgages on pro- only one goes up that can house | ponds stocked With carp and trout | {monet Me eee re. |e netming but __ tragedy. oun ek ee Gera R perties up to $25,000. : wor. and_other species of fish where cellency Bishop Malcolm A. PREP PETITION - him (including Commodore oom Se i : certain other é Fhe pebtic housing program, Mr. | crowds angle day and night. Most of | MacEachern. . ra ON” |ment( ‘Thou shalt not kilt), Mr. onight * ti bond — ss been dogged h ‘ * : LONDON (AP)—The National | Cowan revealed the simple for- T 9:30 p.m. classes are also available. : Bradley charged. has ogged | these ponds are located in parks and | ryrey survivors of the Santa | Union of Protestants announeea | mula by which he makes his , . e , every step of the way by public | amusement areas but a few have | Elena, sunk in October, 1943, en |‘Seturday it is preparing a na- | Judgments: “There are only two Rainbow Jazz oh ’ ao ; apathy. Worse, it has met outright | sprung up in the office buildings of | route to Liaty met in the Char- | Nomwide petition agains! any | clases of people on earth— the |] Big HYNDMAN & CO. LTD. | | opposition from suburban communi- | the busy Ginza area. These fish ponds | 7p “Conrsd of. Chatbotistown, Pee beim. Cardin, xcecee (seed ted the tad end thy Just sarap a Yt Bawa” :3 ze meet ties, scared out of their wits at the are open during working hours and | Mr. Jolm Bassett, Jr., of the | has said in Rome that the Pope |: tata, ‘bath the some.” Members & Guests MORTGAGE AND INSURANCE BROKERS = = | | a '- . } a , i ¥r oe thought of living next door to a low os ee re Leo F MacDonald of Charlotte: {tion of Liverpoo"'s new Roman ‘This makes it a mite ditticult || Main Brace Club oat il icimaniea pectasr, sate ged income family. , 2 é noon nae } town. Catholic cathedral. for the God-fearing folks: @f . ———— — ' ‘ > ’ . : io se : é ° é : ; \ ? f 4 \ ‘eekat a ees. t = —— ae wt oan ° i A A all 9 Ap SPR ARR ge CB : cas whey * + At tw oe OO OF On init ti alle iN Bie Me py ne iad nr Al gph Re NE an A Dette Nin A'S ms tet este as hs work Sllaeneet dd ae : a neers: alpen persian erent om Srgrne on a te - Orcinndnhtmnits th tnara eres a aeonietane ve ne cate Toy 8 oA te Ayia hart ot ee 8. On Be 5 Oe BH Bt Ort Be mts Am Mee OMe Ae. Om One 054 Fo Hm eR + BevMo tatiatiiaatenien eae — rs oe ” eee p: e , e Pee a Ste en ee ee ee eT ee ee eee ee ee ae to Pee ee " ned